Had a Husqvarna snowblower blowers. There won't be another one of those on my property. Have a Husqvarna riding mower, not too shabby, but it just underwent the 3rd service cycle. It seems OK.
The robot mower I'd need is $4,300 according to the products presented. My rider was $1,000 more and most likely won't lead a device revolution that places me in digital prison for expecting it to keep my swampy weed patch at less than "jungle" growth.
I bought a Husq Zero turn 52" last year, when my Dixon 42" (25 years old) died. Great mower. The Husq is good too, but the hydraulic steering is a bit imprecise and not very proportional. Does a good cut but, could use another 3oo rpm's on the blades (like all of them). Just broke it out for the first cut on Monday.
E TN here. Yep. Our lawn seems to be running a special this year on Wound Wort. That's in addition to the regular TN mix. The weeds, er lawn, must really like the stuff in the chemtrails because it will be just going along then it rains and it grows 4 inches overnight.
Ferry Morse and Burpee sell small packets and they are just enough for my planters/pots. At about $1.99 a packet, I can get a fantastic display of color all summer long in the pots on my deck.
Replacing the lawn with that is about the stupidest thing I have ever heard. Seriously, it will look good for a summer. Following summers you either have to completely turn over the entire lawn and re-sow a new bunch of flowers, or you get a tangled mass of uninvited weeds that look like crap.
These things sound good on the surface, and people who have never actually tried something like this think it is a good idea. But, reality is replacing your lawn with astroturf is an improvement over this idea.
Hah!! If this product becomes mainstream it will beat "parking" for number one agenda slot at HOAs across the country.
Here you go, Miguel:
https://www.husqvarna.com/us/robotic-lawn-mowers/residential-robotic-lawn-mowers/
Had a Husqvarna snowblower blowers. There won't be another one of those on my property. Have a Husqvarna riding mower, not too shabby, but it just underwent the 3rd service cycle. It seems OK.
The robot mower I'd need is $4,300 according to the products presented. My rider was $1,000 more and most likely won't lead a device revolution that places me in digital prison for expecting it to keep my swampy weed patch at less than "jungle" growth.
I bought a Husq Zero turn 52" last year, when my Dixon 42" (25 years old) died. Great mower. The Husq is good too, but the hydraulic steering is a bit imprecise and not very proportional. Does a good cut but, could use another 3oo rpm's on the blades (like all of them). Just broke it out for the first cut on Monday.
E TN here. Yep. Our lawn seems to be running a special this year on Wound Wort. That's in addition to the regular TN mix. The weeds, er lawn, must really like the stuff in the chemtrails because it will be just going along then it rains and it grows 4 inches overnight.
I do wildflower seeds.
Ferry Morse and Burpee sell small packets and they are just enough for my planters/pots. At about $1.99 a packet, I can get a fantastic display of color all summer long in the pots on my deck.
Replacing the lawn with that is about the stupidest thing I have ever heard. Seriously, it will look good for a summer. Following summers you either have to completely turn over the entire lawn and re-sow a new bunch of flowers, or you get a tangled mass of uninvited weeds that look like crap.
These things sound good on the surface, and people who have never actually tried something like this think it is a good idea. But, reality is replacing your lawn with astroturf is an improvement over this idea.